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Wednesday, March 08, 2017

Great North Big Band Jazz Festival @ Park View Community Centre, Chester le Street. March 4

(Review by Russell)

Eleven o’clock Saturday morning. Coaches arriving from all points bringing an array of big band talent to Chester le Street. Volunteer stewards ensured drivers parked where they were should, rather than where they would prefer. Catering staff were already hard at work, the hot food and licensed bar were about to do good business – little wonder with six hundred and fifty musicians due to perform to hundreds of big band fans converging on Church Chare.

Saturday’s day-long programme is devoted to the Open Section. Senior bands – several of them university student big bands – converged on Chester le Street ready to engage in fierce, friendly competition hoping to be crowned champions. As has become the custom Newcastle UniversityJazz Orchestra led the way. The band’s conductor Charles (Charlie) Philp is an occasional jam session participant at the Jazz Café up the road in Newcastle. On this occasion he left his guitar behind to concentrate on directing his fellow students at this early hour (11:00am) in a four-song set of twenty minutes’ duration. A Don Sebesky arrangement of Take the A Train for openers (an alumnus of Durham County Youth Big Band Tom McDonald, trombone, a featured soloist) more Ellington (It Don’t Mean a Thing), then Manteca and to close, the first Gordon Goodwin chart, the all-sirens-blazing Jazz Police.

Durham University Big Band (one of several award winning bands) arrived in the nick of time. A tickled Bill Watson (Festival Director) ribbed several members of the orchestra, congratulating them on negotiating the journey from Durham to Chester le Street (approx distance five miles). To think some of these bright young things will be future captains of industry! Matthew (Matt) Jacobs is the band’s current MD. Pianist Jacobs has sat in at the Jazz Café, played small group gigs around the region and is a key figure in Durham’s thriving student-led Empty Shop jam sessions. The band’s big hitters were in the ranks including Matt McKernan (tenor) and the impressive Tristan Bacon (drums). Ellington and Jerome Kern standards formed the core of the performance. A Callum Au arrangement of Caravan followed by Bill Holman’s breezy arrangement of Ol Man River made an impression on a note-taking audience. J Dilla’s Fall in Love has been in the pad for a while with an exceptionally good version by the band’s former vocalist Laura Paul a lasting memory. It was good to see that Katie Moberly has taken on the challenge. Alto saxophonist Zach Fox almost blew the roof off the building – most impressive.

Gateshead Schools’ music education stalwart David Blakey arrived with something of a scratch band in tow. Keen to participate, several of his young charges would gain invaluable performance experience, this, the essence of the Great North Big Band Jazz Festival. Work Song and Out of the Doghouse scored well with a number of strong solo contributions including Nathan Lawson doing the business playing his new black f-hole guitar, Thomas Wilkinson and Chris Watson, trumpets, and rising star saxophonist Alex Thompson.

The Infinity Jazz Orchestra began with a late change to the programme. Strike Up the Band for starters, then a trumpet feature for Mike Turner on Lil’ Darlin’ and the Wigan-based band led by Chris Langford concluded withKatherine Browning, tenor, on Hip to be Square.

Motorway delays necessitated a shuffling of the pack. Big Band Theory would be late arriving, so, stepping into the breach, Leeds College of Music Student Union Big Band conducted by the engaging Eloise Oates-Lidar,took to the stage mid-afternoon, a little ahead of schedule. A Frank Mantooth arrangement of Moonlight in Vermont with a funk feel to it, Tom Richards, tenor, made a big impression on Bill Holman’s arrangement of Stairway to the Stars and Ola Lauvås, trumpet, on Bob Mintzer’s Incredible Journey elicited the comment from one sage judge: It doesn’t get much better than that!

Conductor Danny Miller made the trip over the Pennines once again with the LIPA Big Band. An attractive looking programme on paper turned out to be an attractive programme in practice. Four numbers – Wayne Shorter’s Footprints, Greg Abate’s Kerry’s Bossa, a Miller original and Johnny’s Theme (Johnny Carson’s Tonite Show) – illustrated the orchestra’s collective talents, the sections handling with ease changes in tempi and style.

The Hexham-based Tyne Valley Big Band travels in numbers. Last year’s raiding party comprised something in the region of thirty musicians. MD Dave Hignett doesn’t do things in halves (nor does he drink halves!), boundless enthusiasm is key, and this year’s away day jaunt delivered the band’s usual power-packed performance. Trombonist Simon Hirst impressed on Sammy Nestico’s Switch in Time, the ebullient Barbara Hignett was born to sing Minnie the Moocher and a set-concluding Cajun Cookin’ served up several helpings of hot playing from, amongst others Kevin Wright, piano and a chilli peppered blast from Andrea de Vere, tenor, and the man sailing the high Cs, Alastair Lord, trumpet.

A band’s competition programme often plays it safe. Leeds Jazz Orchestra cocked a snook at any such notion. Township jazz and Charles Mingus made for an intriguing set. Kondo by Assagai (arr. Colin Byrne and Alison Sheldon) fused pared-down percussive rhythms. Two Mingus compositions (arranged by band MD Colin Byrne) challenged musicians and audience alike. Don’t be Afraid the Clown’s Afraid Too featured trombonist Richard Warrington. A well-received set from LJO, review notes read: VG programme.

Local heroes the Durham Alumni Big Band returned to participate once again at the Great North Big Band Jazz Festival. MD Shaune Eland reassembled the A-team including the Robinsons (Ian and Matthew, father and son trumpeters), Alex Baker playing alto (Daniel Johnson occupying the tenor chair), and the presence of a secret weapon lurking in the trombone section…the cimbasso. Matt Roberts’ Barnard’s Loop exemplified the inherent quality of the band – the composer present in spirit only, the sections firing, doing justice to our absent local hero’s conception, solos from the excellent Dan Johnson (tenor) and Johnny Dunn (trumpet).

The late arriving Big Band Theory took to the stage with one further competition entry to follow. A vocal-led programme of four numbers featuring Adrian Lee-Stokes took the form of a classic Rat Pack revue. Beyond the Sea the conventional material, Jeremy Sheppard’s arrangement of Jump the not so conventional. It remained to be seen what the adjudicators made of MD Edd Maughan and his band.

Seven hours and more of competition would shortly draw to a close, but not before the appearance of Bolton’s The Managers Band. Saturday morning early bird arrivals had analysed and dissected the prospects of the twelve competing bands. The consensus view was that the Bolton band had to be in with a shout. Previous appearances in Sunderland had been nothing short of incendiary. The change in venue could, perhaps, bring a change in fortunes. Pianist and MD Ben Shepherd knows how to work a crowd. Ray Brown’s The Opener unleashed the tenacious tenor of Kyran Matthews taking no prisoners with a coruscating performance making the Buddy Rich Band sound positively timid by comparison! Ellington’s Sunset and the Mocking Bird scored top marks with a superb solo by clarinetist Emily Burkhardt. Bandleader Shepherd went all Basie on The Kid from Red Bank. A classic tune given the treatment – killer stuff…a winning performance? A West Side Story Medley (arr. Bill Reddie) concluded the Bolton outfit’s impressive presentation.

The Great North Big Band Jazz Festival’s adjudicators compared notes. Messrs Mick Donnelly and Adrian Tilbrook rightly took their time, a National Glass Centre trophy at stake. The stage crew set about transforming the stage for the awards presentation. An indication of the status of the event is the ongoing support offered by the University of Sunderland and the welcome presence of Pro-Vice Chancellor Graeme Thompson to present prizes to the lucky winners. Festival Director Bill Watson announced the results as follows:

Adjudicators’ Award: Eloise Oates-Lidar conductor Leeds College of Music Student Union Big Band

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Bebop Spoken Here -- Here, being the north-east of England -- centred in the blues heartland of Newcastle and reaching down to the Tees Delta and looking upwards to the Land of the Kilt.Not a very original title, I know; not even an accurate one as my taste, whilst centred around the music of Bird and Diz, extends in many directions and I listen to everything from King Oliver to Chick Corea and beyond. Not forgetting the Great American Songbook the contents of which has provided the inspiration for much great jazz and quality popular singing for round about a century.The idea of this blog is for you to share your thoughts and pass on your comments on discs, gigs, jazz - music in general. If you've been to a gig/concert or heard a CD that knocked you sideways please share your views with us. Tell us about your favourites, your memories, your dislikes.Lance (Who wishes it to be known that he is not responsible for postings other than his own and that he's not always responsible for them.)